What was advertised in a revolutionary American newspaper 250 years ago today?

“Sold by the Printer hereof … COMMON SENSE.”
On February 23, 1776, Timothy Green, the printer of the Connecticut Gazette, announced the publication of yet another local edition of Thomas Paine’s Common Sense. He joined other printers in publishing, advertising, and disseminating the incendiary political pamphlet far beyond Philadelphia, where Robert Bell published and advertised the first edition on January 9. Since then, Bell produced an unauthorized second edition and Paine worked with William Bradford and Thomas Bradford, the printers of the Pennsylvania Journal, on an expanded new edition (and they engaged in a public argument about the competing editions in the Pennsylvania Evening Post and other newspapers published in Philadelphia). The Bradfords also informed readers that a German edition was in the works. In addition, they indicated that they would fill an order from Virginia for one thousand copies. It did not take long for William Green, a bookseller and bookbinder in New York, to advertise copies of Bell’s first and second editions. John Anderson, the printer of the Constitutional Gazette in New York, soon marketed the first local edition published beyond Philadelphia. By the middle of February, John Carter, the printer of the Providence Gazette, advised readers that his local edition would hit the market within a week.
That edition went on sale at the same time that Green released a local edition in New London. According to the advertisement, Judah P. Spooner, his brother-in-law and former apprentice who operated a printing office in Norwich, sold the pamphlet there as well. The imprint on the title page suggested that Green and Spooner collaborated as publishers, but Spooner did the printing: “Philadelphia: Printed. Norwich: Re-printed and sold by Judah P. Spooner, and by T. Green, in New-London.” Green gave their advertisement a privileged place in the Connecticut Gazette, placing it immediately after updates from Hartford. That made it difficult for readers to miss. He did not, however, include elements that often appeared in advertisements for other editions in other newspapers, such as the list of section headers that outlined the contents or the epigraph from “Liberty,” a poem by James Thomson. Lack of space may have prevented Green from publishing a more elaborate advertisement, though he may have considered the buzz around Common Sense sufficient to sell it once prospective customers knew where to purchase a local edition.




























